Strategy

Esports betting rising slowly but steady

Esports is one the newest and one of the hottest topics in sports industry currently. Millions of people are playing games every day, and the best players are competiting against each other for price pools that are already thousands or even millions of dollars. While everyone can’t be a pro player, everyone has possibility to bet for their favourite teams and players. Every major sports betting site is already offering esports betting for multiple games, covering all the biggest eSports events.

Around the sports betting, there have always been a “sports tipping” scene going on, where sports betters share their tips for upcoming matches and tournaments. For eSports, this scene is raising it’s head all the time, and esports betting and tipping sites like eSportsodds.gg are providing better esports gambling content every day. While esports betting might be new thing for most people, it’s providing very good entertainment once you get to know with esports games. Currently the most watched eSports games are: Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, Dota 2, Overwatch, Pubg and of course Fortnite. Fortnite announced just couple days ago, that it’s going to invest 100 million dollars to boost its own esports scene even bigger. That’s of course bringing more teams and fans to yet again, new big esports game scene.

How to make money with esports betting?

Even thought esports betting is very interesting to dive into, and it will provide entertainment for hours, you can also make money by doing it. Best eSports gamblers study how the individual teams and players are performing against other teams. They also keep an eye for game meta changes and updates, to maximise their esports odds and winnings. There aren’t so many teams and players in the esports game yet, that you couldn’t keep track who to bet for. That’s why I think that esports betting is one of the easiest sports betting areas to beat the odds. Of course you must remember that there’s always a chance to lose everything.

Stellaris is one of those games that will take you by surprise. It is a 4X space strategy game that allows the player to create their race and conquer the galaxy. The original game was huge and quite complex. The number of races you could choose as a template for your unique race was significant, and the number of modifiers exceeded every other 4X space game.

The complex nature of this product, especially race creation part, rendered it unlikable by casual strategy players. Only those that are willing to invest dozens upon dozens of hours into a space strategy will find this game attractive.

Synthetic Dawn is an expansion of this game that introduces robotic races that you can use to conquer the galaxy, either by force, diplomacy or several other means.

Machine supremacy in the Stellaris

The original Stellaris (Utopia version) had an option where you could transfer minds of your people in machines and turn your race into a mix of machines and humans. The new expansion (whose release date is still unknown) will introduce four new robotic races which you will be able to use in Stellaris. It also introduces Ancient Caretakers, which is a new Fallen Empire whose goal is still unknown.

Machine races are different, and they all have their means of expansion and the way to deal with the biological population. For example, you have Rogue Servitors that force conquered population to subdue to the “Mandatory Pampering” law. In this case, the population is given everything it needs. The machines rule and population has to obey the law or die to fight against the rulers.

Assimilators are a Borg-like (Star Trek) race of machines and cyborgs that assimilates all pops they conquer. Exterminators are the representation of the Skynet in Stellaris, and their only goal is to exterminate all organic life (or use it as their batteries). The most organic friendly machine empire is the Ethos. They will either purge organic pops or expel them from their empire. This diversity means that repetitiveness isn’t present and you will be able to invest hundreds of hours in Stellaris without it becoming boring.

On the 28th of March 2007 the Third Tiberium War was unleashed upon us. This legendary franchise was being brought back from the wilderness by the EALA team, and it was bringing something with it….’The Visitors’

On the 20th April 2006 EA officially announced Command and Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars, at the time a ‘working title’ and a title that would go on to, and still does cause much debate among C&C fans. Many people suggested a change in the name, Tiberian Twilight and Tiberian Dusk were both mooted by the fans, but the team led by Mike Verdu has stuck to their guns with the title Tiberium Wars.

The community and its involvement in the game

However the community has shaped the development of this game. We must credit jshu0107 for setting up cncvision as a site which, thanks to the regular polls and ‘Ideas’ threads both there, and on the official C&C3 forums have been acknowledged by the EA Community Representatives, Predator and Apoc as being read by the development team. Some successes jshu and the community as a whole are issues ranging from major; Blue Tiberium, to the smaller; roofs for the GDI Buggy.

The effects of community on the C&C

While many people have lambasted EA for their handling of the C&C franchise it is important to note that they have involved the community and kept us appraised of the development progress. With features such as the Newsletter, Developer Blogs, Podcasts and work from Predator and Apoc on the C&C3 forums and ‘away from home’ on sites such as gamereplays.org. Oh, and of course perhaps most significantly the Community Summit held before Christmas. This was where key figures from many major Command and Conquer fan sites were invited to the EALA studios to play the game and hold discussions with the Dev. Team…and they also had a great laugh while they were at it.

Tiberium Wars, origin and changes

Tiberium Wars is based on EA’s SAGE game engine used in C&C: Generals and the Lord of the Rings series. It has been heavily updated and modified since we first saw it back in the day. From videos we have seen, explosions, gunfire and many other aspects were shaped up very well. Despite some early clipping issues and worries on the Juggernaut’s firing stance with the latest batch of videos the game came to a very solid state engine wise.

Faction you can play in this game

Onto the factions, we have three of them. The Global Defense Initiative, The Brotherhood of Nod and a mysterious alien faction referred to as ‘The Visitors’ by Kane and ‘The Invaders’ by GDI forces. The campaign is multi-dimensional. You start as GDI, and then take to the battle as Nod. You will end with the Alien forces. To intersperse the missions the classic FMV’s are returning as does Joe Kucan in reprising his role as Kane. Many other Hollywood stars will appear such as Billy Dee Williams and Michael Ironside. There are due to be 30+ missions, a key feature will be that choices made in the campaign will have an effect later in the story. You have been warned!

Where Tiberium Wars exceeded its predecessors

The gameplay has also gone under the scalpel so to speak. Those that followed the development of the game could see some changes in the way GDI and The Brotherhood play (no more GDI Mechs). In general only the Juggernaut remains and Nod have a new top-level unit, The Avatar.

Despite some subtle changes the GDI remained focused on using pure power to dominate the battlefield; The Predator light tank is used for speed, while the Mammoth tank implemented a split-tread system that can roll in behind to pulverize the enemy.

Nod remains the faster paced side to play; Flame Tanks although having undergone a massive face lift, again deal admirably with infantry. The Avatar Mech can be seen as one of the harder units to play, but in no way less powerful – having the ability to rip pieces of other units off to use itself –and this changes the dynamic of many battles. The Aliens use a totally different style; they have a basic unit which can swarm, and a Tri-pod unit that can fire on multiple targets at once. The Alien units are comparatively weak against infantry but strong against vehicle units.

Changes to the interface

The interface was changed at this point as well – whilst still remaining in its core a C&C interface; a new innovative side bar was introduced. Rather than taking up a whole block as in previous games, this is an adaptable menu system allowing for the classic build from the sidebar that many fans love. However, units such as the Crane and Mini-MCV have been introduced to cater for fans of more modern RTS game mechanics.

Multiplayer – The lifeline of every strategy

The multiplayer aspect of the game was the main focus of the game for many people. As ever with the development of this game the development team have been aware of this fact and have put a lot of time and effort into making sure the multiplayer aspect of the game were up to scratch. They spent the last few weeks of development time to ensure the balance of the game was as fine-tuned as possible. As with the single player game you were able to play as the GDI, The Brotherhood and the Scrin. Multiplayer had an eight player battle system with the in-built Clan Support 1v1 and 2v2 Clan battles were available.

Command and Conquer 3 was released on the Xbox360, a big step for the franchise moving into the Next Gen console world at that time. It maintained the same features as the PC version.

C&C – Supremacy on the PC

Even though C&C expanded on consoles, it still stayed mainly a PC game. The availability of mods and support modders provide made it possible for this franchise to re3ap profit from games that are over ten years old. This can’t be said for the majority of triple-A titles that had multi-million budgets.

Back in the day, it was always a pleasure to see your favorite game enter a top list. PC Gamer UK was, and still is one of the most prominent sites whose lists reflect the opinion of a majority of players. In the past PC Gamer, UK was one of a few relevant gaming sites whose opinion moved the masses. In the modern times, we have hundreds of sites that try to become relevant, and many of them fail. It’s safe to say that PC Gamer is still one of the most prominent gaming sites that brings us news about games and creates lists of favorite games both from the present and the past.

The PC Gamer issue that acknowledged the brilliance of C&C franchise

The 2007 issue of PC Gamer UK was the ever-famous Top 100 Issue. For the PCGUK mag, the Top 100 list is composed of the writers 100 most loved games. And all of us were pleased to inform everyone that two Command and Conquer games have made it into the list.

Command and Conquer: Red Alert 2 was at the Number 60

Command and Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars at Number 58

It was always good to see C&C getting in on the PCGUK list, just a shame they weren’t at higher positions.

How C&C franchise fares in 2017

Some of the C&C games are over twenty years old, and it’s interesting to see how they fare after all that time. Many games become irrelevant after a year or two (modern games) or in some cases after four or five years (older games). C&C franchise contains games that are always relevant, no matter how much time passes. Proof that backs up this statement is the latest top 100 PC games that PC Gamer posted. At that list, you will find C&C: Red Alert 2 at a 42rd place which is an excellent thing for a game that is seventeen years old.

Many other C&C games survived until modern times due to impressive multiplayer and modding community that is always working on something new.

On the 28th of March 2007, the Third Tiberium War was unleashed upon us. This legendary franchise was being brought back from the wilderness by the EALA team, and it was bringing something with it….’The Visitors’

On the 20th April 2006, EA officially announced Command and Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars, at the time a ‘working title’ and a title that would go on to, and still does cause much debate among C&C fans. Many people suggested a change in the name, Tiberian Twilight and Tiberian Dusk were both mooted by the fans, but the team led by Mike Verdu has stuck to their guns with the title Tiberium Wars.

However, the community has shaped the development of this game. We must credit jshu0107 for setting up cncvision as a site which, thanks to the regular polls and ‘Ideas’ threads both there, and on the official C&C3 forums have been acknowledged by the EA Community Representatives, Predator and Apoc as being read by the development team. Some successes jshu and the community as a whole are issues ranging from major; Blue Tiberium, to the smaller; roofs for the GDI Buggy.

The proof that community knows how to shape a game

While many people have lambasted EA for their handling of the C&C franchise, it is important to note that they have involved the community and kept us appraised of the development progress. With features such as the Newsletter, Developer Blogs, Podcasts and work from Predator and Apoc on the C&C3 forums and ‘away from home’ on sites such as gamereplays.org. Oh, and of course perhaps most significantly the Community Summit held before Christmas. This was where key figures from many relevant Command and Conquer fan sites were invited to the EALA studios to play the game and hold discussions with the Dev. Team…and they also had a great laugh while they were at it.

Tiberium Wars is based on EA’s SAGE game engine used in C&C: Generals and the Lord of the Rings series. It has been heavily updated and modified since we first saw it back in the day. From videos we have seen, explosions, gunfire and many other aspects were shaped up very well. Despite some early clipping issues and worries on the Juggernaut’s firing stance with the latest batch of videos, the game came to an excellent state engine wise.

Faction in the Tiberium Wars

Onto the factions, we have three of them. The Global Defense Initiative, The Brotherhood of Nod and a mysterious alien faction referred to as ‘The Visitors’ by Kane and ‘The Invaders’ by GDI forces. The campaign is multi-dimensional. You start as GDI and then take to the battle as Nod. You will end with the Alien forces. To intersperse the missions the classic FMV’s are returning as does Joe Kucan in reprising his role as Kane. Many other Hollywood stars will appear such as Billy Dee Williams and Michael Ironside. There are due to be 30+ missions; a key feature will be that choices made in the campaign will affect the story later on. You have been warned!

Changes to the gameplay

The gameplay has also gone under the scalpel so to speak. Those that followed the development of the game could see some shifts in the way GDI and The Brotherhood play (no more GDI Mechs). In general, only the Juggernaut remains, and Nod has a new top-level unit, The Avatar.

Despite some subtle changes the GDI remained focused on using pure power to dominate the battlefield; The Predator light tank is used for speed, while the Mammoth tank implemented a split-tread system that can roll in behind to pulverize the enemy.

Nod remains the faster-paced side to play; Flame Tanks although having undergone a massive face lift, again deal admirably with infantry. The Avatar Mech can be seen as one of the harder units to play, but in no way less powerful – having the ability to rip pieces of other units off to use itself –and this changes the dynamic of many battles. The Aliens use a different style; they have a basic unit which can swarm and a Tri-pod unit that can fire on multiple targets at once. The Alien units are comparatively weak against infantry but strong against vehicle units.

The highly desired update of the interface and multiplayer

The interface was changed at this point as well – while remaining in its core a C&C interface; a new innovative side bar was introduced. Rather than taking up a whole block as in previous games, this is an adaptable menu system allowing for the classic build from the sidebar that many fans love. However, units such as the Crane and Mini-MCV have been introduced to cater for fans of more modern RTS game mechanics.

The multiplayer aspect of the game was the main focus of the game for many people. As ever with the development of this game the development team have been aware of this fact and have put a lot of time and effort into making sure the multiplayer aspect of the game were up to scratch. They spent the last few weeks of development time to ensure the balance of the game was as fine-tuned as possible. As with the single player game you were able to play as the GDI, The Brotherhood, and the Scrin. Multiplayer had an eight player battle system with the inbuilt Clan Support 1v1, and 2v2 Clan battles were available.

Command and Conquer 3 was released on the Xbox360, a big step for the franchise moving into the Next Gen console world at that time. It maintained the same features as the PC version.

Ten years later – The state of multiplayer

Command and Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars multiplayer was a successful addition to the game, and its legacy still lives on. Even now you can find a dozen or two active lobbies across different platforms where you can play the game. There are some issues with account creation, so it’s best to pick up the game on Steam as their support knows how to deal with that.